Google Play hits 25 billion downloads


Whether you’re looking for directions, checking email or sharing a picture with friends, apps are now an indispensable part of life. And if you’re using Android, it all starts with Google Play, home to 675,000 apps and games. That’s a lot of choice.  We’ve now crossed 25 billion downloads from Google Play, and to celebrate we’re offering some great discounts for the next five days.

In Australia, our celebration will include:
Apps: Celebrate 25 billion Android App Downloads 
Movies: 25 Must See Movies for .99c
Books: 25 Bestselling Books only $1.99


Twenty-five billion is more than twice the distance, in miles, that the Voyager 1 spacecraft has travelled since its launch 35 years ago. It’s the amount of time, in minutes, that have passed since some of our earliest ancestors began to set foot in Europe. And now, thanks to all of you, it’s a Google Play milestone. We look forward to the next 25 billion.

Posted by Jamie Rosenberg, Director, Digital Content 

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Mojosurf Rides the Cloud

Started out of the back of a kombi van 12 years ago, Mojosurf is a great Aussie success story. We’re an Australian surf school that runs fully-guided tours of Australia’s best east coast beaches and surf breaks. We combine the joy of travel with the thrill of surfing in a well-matched marriage that won us the Golden Backpacks Best Tour/Activity in NSW in 2009.

From small beginnings, we now have over 50,000 customers a year. Our seasonal employees number 200 in the summer in addition to the 50 core employees who service our customer base year round.

The strength of our business is our employees’ love of surfing. Unsurprisingly, our guides rarely have the same passion for business administration and IT systems.

Until recently, our staff had to deal with a static server system in Byron Bay, that was occasionally riddled with sand! And as our operation grew, we could no longer put up with its inefficiency and unreliability.

We searched for an solution that could easily accommodate fluctuating staff numbers, provide reliable remote access and was intuitive for non-techie surfies to use. Reliability was also crucial as we don’t have the time or the people-power to facilitate IT assistance to fix basic problems.

Simultaneously juggling hundreds of customers, dozens of class times and a multitude of travel itineraries, we must always stay on top of our scheduling and resourcing. We had started using Google Calendar to organise employees and adventures, such as the scheduling for our buses, before we discovered all the other functions we could use and we moved to Google Apps for Business just over a year ago.

Gmail, Calendar, chat, and video have given Mojosurf staff a one-stop-shop to tap into the administrative side of the business. Importantly, Google Apps is compatible across multiple platforms and devices, as we don’t supply devices to a lot of our staff they can still access our systems from anywhere, including on the road, from any device they like.

Ultimately, our brand is about leisure and adventure, not stress. Google Apps helps us achieve the high level of organisation necessary to manage staff, students and our crucial resources: surfboards.

Editors note: Today’s blog post is by Trevor Wistaff, IT Manager at Mojosurf

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Explore the Great Barrier Reef and more with underwater imagery in Google Maps

Sea turtles, manta rays, jellyfish - these are some of the magnificent (and sometimes lethal) creatures that await the millions of snorkelers, divers, and ocean enthusiasts that visit our shores each year. But what if you could experience some of this wonder without ever getting wet?

Today we’re adding the very first underwater panoramic images to Google Maps. 
The Catlin Seaview Survey used a specially designed underwater camera, the SVII, to capture underwater imagery around the world, as part of their expedition to document the composition and health of coral reefs.


With these vibrant and stunning snapshots now on Google Maps, anyone can now take a virtual dive from their desktop or mobile and explore six of the world’s most incredible underwater spots, including coral reefs in Australia, the Philippines and Hawaii.


Get up close and personal with sea turtles at Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef


You can find a sea turtle swimming among a school of fish, follow a manta ray through the ocean and experience the reef at sunset. We’re also including other ocean sites from around the world: on Apo Island, a volcanic island and marine reserve in the Philippines, you can see an ancient boulder coral, which may be several hundred years old; halfway across the Pacific, in Hawaii, you can join snorkelers in Hanauma Bay and drift over the vast coral reef in the Molokini Crater. From shore to sea, you can dive in and explore this world - without ever putting on a pair of fins!

Over 1.4 million people have also joined the Catlin Seaview Survey community on Google+ to enjoy underwater animal life, coral reefs and even go on live virtual dives through Google+ Hangouts.

Here’s a look at how this group of ocean enthusiasts are sharing their passions with the world: 





All of this imagery will be available at maps.google.com/ocean. You can also find out much more about this reef via the World Wonders Project, a website that brings modern and ancient world heritage sites online.

The Catlin Seaview Survey team on location on the Great Barrier Reef, encountering a manta ray


Whether you’re a marine biologist, an avid scuba diver or a landlocked landlubber, we encourage you to dive in and explore the ocean with Google.

Posted by Nabil Naghdy, Product Manager for Google Maps Australia & New Zealand

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Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger now in the UK!

(Cross-posted from the Google Affiliate Network blog)

Earlier this year, we launched Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger in the US and added new enhancements in June. The positive results and feedback we’ve received are very promising, and we’re excited to announce that this gadget is now available to Blogger users in the UK!

To refresh your memory, Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger is a gadget that makes it easy for Blogger users to insert an affiliate ad into a blog post and earn a commission when someone clicks the link and makes a purchase on the advertiser’s site.

Watch the video below for a quick refresher:

Here’s how to get started:
  1. If you’re a Blogger user in the UK (or the US), go to the Earnings tab in Blogger and sign upfor AdSense if you don’t already have an account.
  2. Once you have an AdSense account, you may see the Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger gadget when you write a new blog post.*
  3. Write a new post and select a relevant affiliate ad from the 'Advertise Products' gadget.
  4. Publish your post, and voilĂ ! You may earn a commission when someone clicks your affiliate ad and makes a purchase.
Participating UK advertisers:
Advertisers including Bestbathrooms.com, Cheapsuites.co.uk, Crooked Tongues, Diamond Manufacturers, eFlorist, Hudsonreed.com, Perfume Click and The Snugg have already come on board, and more are joining every day.

If you’re an advertiser interested in participating in Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger, please reach out to your Google Affiliate Network account team or contact us if you’re not already working with us.

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When disaster strikes, let information slip through the net


[This was originally published today in The Sydney Morning Herald]

When an earthquake shook country Victoria in late June, the first point of call for many Australians was online. "Earthquake" became the top trending term on Twitter within minutes and was the third fastest-rising search term in Australia for the month.

Google's search data show almost anywhere in the world, when a disaster strikes, people head online for information - warning alerts, recommended actions, evacuation routes, the state of essential utilities, social services, shelter and access to food. Tragically, this information isn't always there.

This can be for a variety of reasons: sometimes the information simply isn't online, or it is in a format that is hard to share on the internet or view on mobile. Official sources such as government websites can buckle under a surge in traffic, as happened to Geoscience Australia after the Victorian tremor.

A flood or an earthquake can also redraw our everyday landscape so that conventional maps don't work. For example, last year's Japanese tsunami flooded traffic arteries and many aid workers drove down a main road that had become a dead end, critically delaying services.

That's where the internet comes in. Having been part of the UN response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, I've experienced the challenges of gathering even the most basic information, such as who had access to which communities and where did people most need help? The astonishing rise of social media in Indonesia would bring a rush of answers today, as well as a few new challenges such as verification and information overload. But those challenges are far easier to tackle than the eerie silence that descended upon Aceh.

There's almost no justification for authorities withholding information. At a recent disaster-information conference in the Japanese city of Sendai, participants - from non government organisations to government agencies - unanimously agreed that limiting information does not help calm people. That consensus followed criticism of authorities for sitting on the release of nuclear contamination data for more than month because it was considered "not reliable enough" for the public, yet good enough to share with international agencies.

In an information vacuum, social media such as Twitter registers problems minutes after they occur; the information is soon in the hands of people who need help, as well as in the hands of people who want to help. Our rule of thumb is that the more information is shared, the better it gets. Limits on information cause anxiety.

As the bushfire season nears, the main lesson Australia can take from the Japan experience is to set up processes, collaborate and share data before a crisis. Since the 2009 Victorian bushfires, a lot of Australian agencies have those processes in place, but more often than not they've reached this conclusion the hardest possible way: through crises.

Assuming nearly all information the government has can be useful in a crisis, whether it's something obvious like community-bushfire evacuation routes or mundane details such as the location of portable toilets (an important issue during last year's Christchurch earthquake). Companies, too, can play a role and think about what useful information they can provide in a crisis: banks can let people know where ATMs are working, utilities can provide details on where power and water is available.

Secondly, let's provide that data in open and interoperable formats so it can be used and shared by anyone on the web, not locked in PDFs or JPG images as some evacuation routes and other critical data have been.

Thirdly, let's make data available under open licensing or permissions so that Google and others can legally republish it. At the peak of the 2009 bushfires in Victoria, a rush of traffic made the state's Department of Sustainability and Environment and Country Fire Authority websites hard to access. Google's crisis-response team used government information to launch a map of fire locations, updated in real time, which received more than 1 million page views. It doesn't matter who's hosting it, what counts most is that the information itself is resilient. So it makes sense to have many websites host it and take on the burden together.

It's cliche to say collaboration helps us survive a crisis. What that means today is that information isn't worth anything unless people are taking that information, adapting it, consulting it and getting it to the people who need it.


 product manager for Google.Org's Crisis Response team.

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Moving, singing and dreaming - A Chrome experiment from Cirque du Soleil

Cirque du Soleil, who opened in Sydney last week, stages impressive live performances that challenge the laws of physics and the limits of the human body. Today, at Google’s Big Tent event in New York, the wonder of Cirque du Soleil transcended the confines of real world performance and embraced the entire web through Movi.Kanti.Revo, a new sensory Chrome experiment crafted by Cirque du Soleil and developed by Subatomic Systems.

Movi.Kanti.Revo comes from the Esperanto words for moving, singing and dreaming. In the experiment, you can follow a mysterious character through a beautiful and surreal world to encounter enchanting Cirque du Soleil performances and live an emotional journey made of love, doubts, hopes and dreams.  

 

Breaking with the tradition of point and click web browsing, you can navigate through this unique experience simply by gesturing in front of your device’s camera. This was made possible using the getUserMedia feature of  WebRTC, a technology supported by modern browsers, that, with your permission, gives web pages access to  your computer’s camera and microphone without installing any additional software.

To bring the creativity of Cirque du Soleil to the browser, we mixed traditional HTML and CSS with 3D transitions and HTML5 APIs. If you’re more technology-curious, you can get a backstage tour via our Chromium blog and a brand new technical case study.

Chrome Experiments like Movi.Kanti.Revo demonstrate how the web has evolved into a beautiful creative canvas underpinned by continuously evolving web technologies. For optimal viewing, you’ll need to use a computer that has a camera and a browser that supports WebRTC, like Chrome. You can also access the experiment from a tablet or a mobile phone for a slightly different yet still beautiful experience.

Start your journey at www.movikantirevo.com.


(Cross-posted from the Google Chrome blog)

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#AussieFoodWeek: Get ready to cook, eat & share

Whether searching for a last-minute recipe, watching a live cookalong with your favourite chefs, or looking up recommendations on Google+ Local (and soon, Zagat!), foodies are feeding their passion in so many ways arcoss the web.

To celebrate this great community, we're declaring next week #AussieFoodWeek to bring together the people that love to cook, eat, and share their love for food.

Here are a few ways you can take part:

Learn from some of the best: Watch your favourite chefs in a live hangout on YouTube and Google+. Or better yet, get ingredients together to cook along in the hangout, and post a photo or video of your finished dish, with the hashtag #aussiefoodweek. 


Here’s a schedule of who’s cooking what:



Share recommendations near you: Your friends know what you like, and they probably like the same things you do. Try searching on Google+ Local and see if anywhere nearby has gotten a rave review from a trusted foodie. Here’s one of my favourite lunchtime spots (be sure try try the scotch egg!). We’ll be on the lookout all next week for some hidden gems, so write a review, check in, and let us know what you think. Upload some foodie photos and use the hashtag #aussiefoodweek to make sure your opinion is heard.

Connect with people who share your passions: With Google+ you can search for others with the same tastes as you, and recommend interesting people and pages to follow with a shared circle. In case you’ve never shared a circle before, here’s how http://goo.gl/Vl9e4. To get you started, here are 5 foodies you might not have heard of. Want to share some of your favourites? Be sure to use the hashtag #aussiefoodweek.

So whatever type of cuisine you’re into - if you’re a professional chef, just getting started, or simply enjoy a nice meal - we want to hear from you! Use the hashtag #aussiefoodweek and help spread the culinary love. We’ll be featuring tips, tricks & interesting posts all week long from Google Australia, and will also feature recipe playlists from some of our most popular chefs on YouTube.

Happy eating!

Posted by Ernesto Soriano, Google Australia Marketing Manager & (wannabe chef)

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